Say goodbye to the Huangs: Fresh Off the Boat will make its sixth season its last season, according to a report from Vulture. The ABC sitcom reportedly notified its production staff and cast this week that the network will not order more episodes after Season 6, its current season. The 14th and 15th episodes of Season 6, which do not yet have an airdate but will likely come in early 2020, will serve as a series finale.

Starring Constance Wu and Randall Park, Fresh Off the Boat is the longest-running series about an Asian-American family, and the first network comedy about an Asian-American family since Margaret Cho’s short-lived sitcom, All American Girl, in 1994.

Wu, who has recently starred in hit blockbuster films like Crazy Rich Asians and Hustlers, recently expressed mixed feelings about the show. Following the Season 6 renewal, she tweeted, and then deleted, “So upset right now that I’m literally crying. Ugh. Fuck,” and later, after facing blowback on Twitter, explained that she was upset that the renewal meant she had to “give up another project that I was really passionate about.” She apologized to the cast and crew for her reaction and added, “I’m so grateful for FOTB renewal. I’m proud to be a part of it.”

Fresh Off the Boat premiered in 2015 and is based on Eddie Huang’s memoir of the same, though the series significantly differs from Huang’s memoir and the author himself has denounced the show. Earlier this year, showrunner Nahnatchka Khan exited the show. Khan also recently directed the popular Netflix romantic comedy Always Be My Maybe, starring Park as the male lead.

A Fresh Off the Boatspin-off is in development and will feature an Indian family whose daughter goes to school with Eddie Huang (actor Hudson Yang). The spin-off family will be introduced in a future episode of Fresh Off the Boat that has not yet been filmed.